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Monday, November 5, 2012

PUREFOODS (SMC MIXERS) ALL TIME TOP TEN PLAYERS


10. Roger Yap(2001-2002, 2005-2012) With Roger Yap, the numbers don’t tell the whole story. He was never a big scorer, but throughout his tenure with Purefoods, and later, B-MEG, he served as the vocal leader for the team whose top players were the quiet James Yap and the emotional Kerby Raymundo. As the starting point guard for two Philippine Cup title-winning teams in 2006 and 2010, Roger was the team’s backcourt defensive anchor, allowing James and Peter June Simon to focus on their offense. His efforts were rewarded, as he was named to the Mythical First Team in 2006 and the Mythical Second Team in 2010 despite modest statistics.


9. Glenn Capacio (1988-1995) A former star scorer for Far Eastern University in the UAAP, Capacio’s calling card in the professional ranks was his lockdown defense. He was vital to the Purefoods cause, often tasked to take on the most dangerous scorers of the opposing teams such as Allan Caidic, Samboy Lim, Ato Agustin, Vergel Meneses, and even Jojo Lastimosa. Plus, he had a killer three-point shot that kept defenses honest.




8. Jojo Lastimosa (1988-1990) “The Helicopter” only played three seasons for Purefoods, but he made those three seasons count. The 1988 Rookie of the Year, he helped define the Hotdogs’ character in the early years of the franchise as young men who wouldn’t back down from any challenge. His last conference with Purefoods in the 1990 Reinforced Conference was also the team’s first PBA crown.





7. Marc Pingris (2005-2008, 2009-present) The finals Most Valuable Player of Purefoods’ first championship in the post-Alvin Patrimonio era was neither James Yap nor Kerby Raymundo. It was Marc Pingris, a boundless ball of energy who playsexactly like Slam Dunk’s Hanamichi Sakuragi. It was no coincidence that the team’s performance swooned after he was traded to San Miguel, and that the team regained its championship form after his return. A versatile defender who can guard all five positions, he is just as valuable to the squad as any of its stars on the offensive end.




6. Dindo Pumaren (1989-1993, 1996-2000) During the early years of Purefoods, the team had to contend against all-time great point guards like Hector Calma, Ronnie Magsanoc, and Johnny Abarrientos. But the Hotdogs were never outmatched because they had “The Bullet” Dindo Pumaren, one of the league’s best defenders at the position who doubled as the team’s court general. Even though Alvin Patrimonio and Codiñera were the stars of Purefoods, Pumaren was the Hotdogs’ vocal leader who kept everyone in line.




5. Rey Evangelista (1994-2009) Quiet, steady brilliance. That’s what Rey Evangelista brought to the table for the Purefoods franchise in his 16 seasons with the team. He did everything the team asked him — battling bigger men for offensive rebounds, defending the opposing team’s best player, hitting the open three-pointer, even playing point-forward in unconventional lineups. And he did it with little fanfare; do you even remember what his voice sounds like?

 

4. Kerby Raymundo Sure, Raymundo can be too erratic and too emotional, especially at the end of games. He doesn’t always make the best decisions and can be error-prone. But at his very best, there was no other player in the PBA with Raymundo’s combination of strength, speed, and skill. At his peak, he was damn near unstoppable, punishing smaller opponents in the post, crossing over slower opponents at the top of the key, and banging bodies with behemoths for rebounds at both ends of the floor. When Kerby was good, he was really, really good.



3. Jerry Codiñera (1988-1999) It broke the hearts of millions of Purefoods fans when “The Defense Minister” was traded by Purefoods to Mobiline in 1999 in exchange for Andy Seigle. But Codiñera himself seemed to hold no bitterness toward his old team after the trade. In 2000, when the Hotdogs returned to the Governors’ Cup finals, he was asked in a television program who he wanted to win the title. Codiñera answered, candidly: “Siyempre, Purefoods, for sentimental reasons, ‘di ba?” He may have been traded, but he never stopped being a Purefoods Hotdog. He will forever remain in the hearts of Purefoods fans, just as the team remained in his.


2. James Yap (2004-present) Purefoods fans have Ryan Gregorio to thank for James Yap’s presence on the team today. In the 2004 draft, the coach struck a deal with Shell, who had the first pick, which was asked not to select Yap. In exchange, the Hotdogs agreed to trade center Billy Mamaril to the Turbo Chargers in exchange for Eddie Laure. His production and success on the court speak for themselves. But what made Yap a critical pick for the franchise was that, in the twilight of Alvin Patrimonio’s career, the team was starting to become irrelevant. Beyond his game on the court, it was his quiet charisma that allowed B-MEG to carry on the torch that began with the earliest Purefoods teams.



1. Alvin Patrimonio (1988-2005) “The Captain” remains the face of the franchise almost seven years after his retirement. His four Most Valuable Player awards are testament to his greatness, and it’s an accomplishment he shares with his idol, Ramon Fernandez. When it comes to career numbers, Fernandez leads Patrimonio in almost every category, which handicaps the latter in all “Greatest Player Ever” discussions. But here’s something that you can say about Patrimonio that you couldn’t say about Fernandez: he played to win, and left his heart and soul on the court in each and every game he played. For Patrimonio, it’s not even about whether he won or lost; it’s how he played the game.


Courtesy: Admin Xyzie


PBA’s “PG” rating is spot on By Charlie Cuna



I recall it to be sometime in the last two or three PBA seasons when the "PG" rating was first flashed on the lower corner of the TV screen during PBA games. PG is supposed to mean "Parental Guidance" or the Tagalog version, "Patnubay at Gabay." I thought this to be a bit overboard. After all, these are "just games." Guys in shorts dribble, pass, and shoot the ball into the hoop, and whoever has shot the ball more times, tallying more points, wins the game.
Given the "simple" structure of the game, why would the guidance of parents/elders be needed for such a simple matter? Well, I am now convinced that when one is tasked with educating a new, young viewer of PBA basketball, explanations are often in order and guidance is definitely necessary.
In recent months, a 7-year -old fellow named Ignacio has gotten so engrossed in the PBA. He knows all the teams, the names of most players, and the team standings as they change from game to game, and is set on collecting all twenty of the PBA Trading Cards being sold at the game venues on gamedates. He asks questions all the time about what certain basketball terms mean, how the rules apply, why the referee made a particular call, etc. His parents must frequently explain and guide him.
Ignacio decided that his team of preference, at least for now, is San Mig Coffee (SMC). He loves Marc Pingris, and shouts "Big Game James" whenever James Yap makes a shot. When Rain or Shine narrowly defeated SMC a couple of weeks ago in come-from-behind fashion, Ignacio cried a little. He's an emotional little guy. Explanations of the "you can't win all the time" variety were needed at the time.
Sunday, 04 November, on its regular Sunday playdate, the league held a tripleheader — three games of competitive basketball to keep fans busy from the early afternoon into the late evening. The first game yesterday pitted Barako Bull against Global Port. As Ignacio watched intently, a fastbreak play happened, then all of a sudden huge Enrico Villanueva of Barako turned, struck Mark Yee on the chest with his forearm, then pulled back both his arms and let fly with a two-handed shove to the chest of Yee as a follow-up.
Enrico Villanueva didn't like Mark Yee's little push while he was airborne. (PBA Images)
The boy looked puzzled. "What happened," he asked. An intricate explanation, with the help of the slow-motion replay ensued. Yee had pushed Enrico from behind, a dangerous foul for sure, and Enrico reacted. The referees reviewed the video, made the calls and the game went on. Questions about the incident did not stop there, however. Yee, playing a great game offensively, continued his usual annoying defense, and Barako's Sean Anthony had to throw him off during one rebound play. Replays were shown. The boy had a puzzled look. Patnubay at gabay.
In the second game of the tripleheader, Rain or Shine went up against Meralco. Ignacio is very familiar with Rain or Shine, since it defeated SMC (then still the B-Meg Llamados) in the Governors' Cup Finals last season, much to his displeasure. He does have a certain liking, though, for Big Beau Belga because Belga plays hard and is tough. Well, the referees were pretty lenient in this game, because they allowed more than the usual physicality. Of course, Belga, JR Quiñahan, and practically everyone else on Rain or Shine, thrived on this and, to a certain extent, manhandled the Bolts in a blowout victory.
Some technical fouls were called and hard fouls abounded. Ignacio saw a replay showing Ronjay Buenafe hit in the face by a Belga forearm on a drive, then hit in the chest by a Belga elbow during the box-out on the very next play. Even usually serene Jeff Chan took time to throw dagger looks at Meralco's Cliff Hodge after one physical play.
Hodge, whom Ignacio also admires due to his early rookie success, hit the deck oh, maybe about twenty times, mostly due to chops and hacks and shoves, and sometimes because he dove for the looseball on purpose, as he loves to do. Ignacio said, "Belga and Quiñahan are being really rough today." Explanations about how one team tries to gain an advantage in whatever way it can and "testing the whistles" of the referees became necessary.
JR Quinahan's elbow welcomes Cliff Hodge to the pros. (PBA Images)
The third game, Ginebra San Miguel versus SMC, has been called the "Manila Clasico." The rivalry name already called for some explanation, as did the reason for Ginebra's immense popularity. Ignacio even asked about this guy named Jaworski and what connection he had to Mark Caguioa and the rest of the Barangay. Wow, the task of explaining and guiding was becoming very difficult. It was becoming a history lesson, but the eager student was more than willing to listen and learn.
When Dylan Ababou went down early due to an obvious injury, explanations about injuries were also in order. "But nobody hit him," Ignacio said. Well, those happen, injuries without having to get hit. He couldn't seem to understand, but he accepted the explanation.
At the end of more than six hours of basketball, Ignacio was happy because SMC had clobbered Ginebra. His favorite guy Pingris played well, as did PJ Simon, Big Game James and the guy he was referring to as "Devans", pronounced like "Evans". Joe DeVance was adjudged the Best Player of the Game and perhaps rivals Pingris now as Ignacio's favorite SMC player.
Marc Pingirs soars high for a one-hander. (PBA Images)
In the aftermath, it is very obvious that the proper guidance, advice, and explanations from elders are necessary even for what we may all deem as a simple game. Grown-up things happen when grown-ups play and children need to be properly informed, enlightened, and educated. Developing the love of children for sports can be enhanced by watching the games live or on television, but definitely, watching with them and teaching them is important. (Can you even imagine what they're absorbing without proper guidance from all those silly cartoons and video games?)
When DeVance suddenly brought out his Gangnam Style dance to celebrate the victory while being interviewed post-game, he brought an even bigger smile to Ignacio's face. Then the boy asked, "Why did he have to dance?" Uh, oh…his parents better be able to explain that one.
You can follow Charlie Cuna on Twitter @Charlie C.
Editor's note: The blogger's views do not represent Yahoo! Southeast Asia's position on the topic or issue being discussed in this post.

Mike Cortez to Air 21 looms as 3-team trade with Ginebra, Petron in the works



AKTV/Paul Ryan Tan
If plans don’t miscarry, Mike Cortez will have a reunion of sorts with his former college coach Franz Pumaren.
A three-team trade that will send Cortez to the Express is now in the works among Air 21, Barangay Ginebra San Miguel, and Petron Blaze.
Pumaren, the Air 21 coach, and team executive Lito Alvarez told InterAKTV that they’ve already proposed a trade to Barangay Ginebra San Miguel for the services of the veteran guard, who played for the coach at La Salle.
Cortez was Pumaren’s starting point guard when the Green Archers won its fourth straight title in 2001. The coach had earlier expressed interest to be reunited with his former sentinel.
“We’re still waiting for them,” Pumaren told InterAKTV when asked which players will be dealt in the three-way trade. “Depende yan sa kanila.”
Alvarez said the trade would also involve Petron Blaze, which is likely to send veteran guard Denok Miranda in the deal.
“Kailangan ng guard ng Ginebra while yung Petron naman, malaki ang kailangan nila dahil injured si (June Mar) Fajardo and (Danny) Ildefonso,” said Alvarez.
According to the executive, either rookie center Yousef Taha or James Sena can be included in the three-team deal.

source: http://www.interaksyon.com/interaktv/mike-cortez-to-air-21-looms-as-3-team-trade-with-ginebra-petron-in-the-works